Mature trees edge the property and provide privacy and contrast to the rolling lawns and stone walkways. Amid all the verdant surroundings, the beautifully designed pool and spa flow into custom inlets.

Upon stepping into the foyer, the house opens up into a spacious, moss green living room, topped with a stunning white exposed beam vaulted ceiling. Virtual visitors can use their mouse or arrow keys to examine the intricacies of the ceiling in greater detail.

Continuing through the doorway leads visitors into the jaw-dropping kitchen, complete with a professional six-burner gas range inset in a marble-topped island. The open-air architecture imbues the area with natural light and innate elegance.

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Inman Connect San Francisco is over. But the technology products, industry creativity, tips, tactics and insight it generated remain in hyperdrive. No other event that revolves around the sale of houses coalesces such industry expertise and tech intelligence. Here’s what I learned from my time on the floor.

SAN FRANCISCO — Real estate tech has largely revolved around generating leads for real estates agents. But panelists at Inman Connect San Francisco argue that lead generation products often distracts agents from technology that is far more valuable: tools that help agents milk their sphere of influence for business.

Real estate agents and marketers will soon be able to produce photorealistic 3-D models using a regular camera, rather than hardware that costs thousands of dollars. Software built by 3-D provider InsideMaps will begin rendering photos captured by wide-lens SLR cameras into lifelike representations near the end of August, according to InsideMaps CEO George Bolanos.